NORRISTOWN — Against all odds, the Four Seasons Banquet Hall horror story has ended with a happy ending for at least one couple.

Not only have all the “jilted” brides and grooms apparently found new wedding venues at the last minute, at least one couple has received a refund from the defunct caterer.

When Jessica McGoldrick got the call in April that the popular Four Seasons would be shutting its doors well before her June 6 wedding reception, she figured she and her fiancee would be left standing at the altar holding a worthless receipt for $2,450.

Booking an 11th-hour reception at Presidential Caterers for the same date may have been regarded as the easy part compared to ever getting their money back from Four Seasons.

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“I am very doubtful it will happen. I’m happy because the location is nicer, but I’m very nervous that I am not going to get my money back,” the West Norriton resident said back on April 17. “I spoke with someone who had a formal event scheduled at Four Seasons last Saturday and was told the day before the event would not take place. He is going to small claims court, and I guess that will be my next step if I don’t get the money in two or three weeks as they promised.”

Luckily, justice came her way without the hassle of going through the legal system.

As Four Seasons manager Victor Morris had promised, not long after the surprising phone call, the check was indeed in the mail — certified mail, in fact.

“It only took a week, which really surprised me. I was very glad to see that check,” McGoldrick said.

The money went straight into the Presidential wedding fund, she said.

“Rather than get the discounted package, we went with their regular package, which was pricier than we anticipated but had more of what we wanted. And we were able to get the same date, June 6, so I’m happy about that.”

A few days after the closing of the Four Seasons — located behind 7-Eleven in the Sandy Hill section of Norristown — Morris said he had guaranteed that refunds would be going out within two or three weeks.

“They’re going to get every dollar back. They were told that as of Friday, April 11, Four Seasons Banquet Hall is ‘no longer open for business and will not be able to cater your affair. Within a couple of weeks we will return your deposits.’“

Morris Catering LLC had been renting space from Rudy DiGiacomo to operate Four Seasons Banquet Hall at 1339 Sandy St. for the last seven years.

Through the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, DiGiacomo said he had no choice but to eject Morris Catering from the premises for nonpayment of rent, as of March 31.

“When you’re renting a commercial property and you don’t pay your rent you get evicted,” DiGiacomo said, sitting in his Bridgeport office. “Because there is so much money owed, you need the sheriff’s office to seize the property for a legal eviction process.”

The amount of damages sought initially was around $36,000, the Bridgeport native allowed.

And so the checkered history of a once-successful local icon that began as Terry’s Crystal Room in the early ’70s awaits its future in back of two thriving operations, the 42-year-lessee 7-Eleven and Rocco’s Brick Oven Pizzeria.

“We’re not sure what we’re going to do with the property now,” DiGiacomo said. “We’re looking for a suitable tenant right now.”